Akiko Yano
Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox musical artist Template:Nihongo is a Japanese pop and jazz musician and singer born in Tokyo and raised in Aomori and later began her singing career in the mid-1970s. She has been called "one of the major musical talents of the Japanese popular music world",<ref name="anderson" /> and her vocals and singing style have been compared to English singer Kate Bush (who she predates by several years).<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="taylor2016">Template:Cite web</ref>
She has recorded with Yellow Magic Orchestra and its members Ryuichi Sakamoto, Haruomi Hosono and Yukihiro Takahashi, as well as with Swing Out Sister, Pat Metheny, The Chieftains, Lyle Mays, members of Little Feat, David Sylvian, Mick Karn, Kenji Omura, Gil Goldstein, Toninho Horta, Mino Cinelu, Jeff Bova, Charlie Haden, Peter Erskine, Anthony Jackson, David Rhodes, Bill Frisell, Thomas Dolby, the band Quruli, Rei Harakami as Yanokami and her daughter Miu Sakamoto.
Biography
[edit]Early life
[edit]Akiko Yano was born Akiko Suzuki in Tokyo in 1955. She grew up in Aomori, Japan,<ref name=nippop>Template:Cite web</ref> and learned to play the piano when she was three.<ref name=nippop /> She dropped out of high school and moved to Tokyo at the age of fifteen to become a professional musician, quickly became involved in the jazz scene, and by seventeen was working as a studio recording artist for hire.<ref name="bowler2019">Template:Cite periodical</ref><ref name="asahi-pt1">Template:Cite web</ref> She also performed with the band Tin Pan Alley.<ref name="anderson">Template:Cite book</ref>
Solo career
[edit]Yano's debut album, Japanese Girl, was released on July 25, 1976,<ref name="taylor2016" /> was a major hit in Japan, and gave Yano overnight success.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The album was recorded in Los Angeles with Little Feat, and of the album's ten tracks, she wrote nine of them.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="bowler2019" /> The album has been praised for its unique blend of different musical styles such as jazz, pop, blues, and traditional Japanese folk music, and "still sounds fresh today", according to Paul Bowler of Record Collector magazine.<ref>Template:Cite periodical</ref> The success led to her self-producing the second album, Iroha Ni Konpeitou, which was released in 1977.<ref name="bowler2019" /> It was recorded primarily in Japan, and features Yano improvising on a variety of instruments, backed up by prominent musicians such as Rick Marotta and Haruomi Hosono.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Around this time, Yano started collaborating with Yellow Magic Orchestra and joined them on two world tours.<ref name="bowler2019" /> They also played as the backing band for her 1980 album Gohan Ga Dekitayo, which translates to "Dinner's Ready", and marked a shift in her musical style towards electro-pop.<ref>Template:Cite periodical</ref> The album was also one of the earliest CDs ever released in 1982.<ref>Template:Discogs release</ref>
1981's Tadaima ("I'm Home") has become one of the most beloved of Yano's discography, and also one of her personal favorites.<ref name="bowler2019" /> The record company asked for an album that would be a commercial success, so Yano gave them what they wanted on side one, but took side two in a different avant-garde direction, composed around nine short stories that were written by children.<ref name="bowler2019" /> The album once again featured the Yellow Magic Orchestra, as well as a cartoonish heta-uma cover designed by Teruhiko Yumura,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> but was only released in Japan.<ref>Template:Cite periodical</ref> The album's single "Harusaki Kobeni" was released before the album was recorded, and reached the top 40 chart after being used in cosmetics commercials.<ref name="asahi-pt2">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Yano was introduced to British band, Japan, by Ryuichi Sakamoto of the Yellow Magic Orchestra, and in 1982 they met at the AIR Studios in London to record an album, Ai Ga Nakucha Ne ("There Must Be Love").<ref>Template:Cite periodical</ref> The record company, Japan Record, released the album as a set with a book of photography and at a lower price, as requested by Yano.<ref>Template:Cite periodical</ref> After her 1984 album Oh Hisse, Oh Hisse, Yano took a one-year break from recording music to raise her children, and decided to refocus her career on jazz, which led to the 1989 album Welcome Back featuring Pat Metheny, Charlie Haden and Peter Erskine.<ref name="bowler2019" /> She relocated to New York City in 1990.<ref name=nippop />
Other projects
[edit]Template:BLP sources section Yano's credits extend beyond her album projects. She was showcased by Japanese animation film company Studio Ghibli, which is known for works such as Princess Mononoke and Spirited Away. Yano composed the music for the film My Neighbors the Yamadas<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> (as well as performing a minor role as Fujihara-sensei) and created and performed the sound effects using only her voice for two short films Yadosagashi<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and Mizugumo Monmon<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> by animation director Hayao Miyazaki. Both films were shown at the Ghibli Museum in Mitaka, Tokyo. More recently in 2008, Yano performed as a voiceover actress on Ponyo on the Cliff by the Sea as Ponyo's sisters.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In addition, Yano composed music for Toei's animated feature, Atashin'chi<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and piano-based soundtrack for the film Tagatameni.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
As an international artist, Yano has toured Europe extensively, performing at The Montreux Jazz Festival, Café de la Danse, and Cité de la Musique in Paris. In 2002, she also performed a week of special concerts at Pizza Express in London. In the United States, Yano has performed in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Boston and New York City where she periodically plays concerts throughout the year at Joe's Pub at the New York Public Theater. In July 2009, she performed at the North Sea Jazz Festival along with fellow pianist Hiromi Uehara.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In recent years she has appeared at the Blue Note in New York as a guest performer for Janis Siegel of The Manhattan Transfer, and as part of a trio with Anthony Jackson on bass and Cliff Almond on drums in concerts at the Blue Note Tokyo since 2003. In 2008, New York guitarist Marc Ribot joined Yano for sold-out shows at the Blue Note Tokyo.
Yano joined with Rei Harakami to create the duo Yanokami, and in 2007 they released their first studio album Yanokami.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2009, Will Lee and Chris Parker joined her to form the Akiko Yano Trio.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Discography
[edit]- Solo studio albums
- Japanese Girl (1976)
- Iroha ni Konpeitō (1977)
- To Ki Me Ki (1978)
- Gohan ga Dekitayo (1980)
- Tadaima. (1981)
- Ai ga Nakuchane. (1982)
- OSOS (1984)
- Tōge No Wagaya (1986)
- Brooch (1986)
- Granola (1987)
- Welcome Back (1989)
- Love Life (1991)
- Super Folk Song (1992)
- Love Is Here (1993)
- Elephant Hotel (1994)
- Piano Nightly (1996)
- Oui Oui (1997)
- Go Girl (1999)
- Home Girl Journey (2000)
- Reverb (2002)
- Honto No Kimochi (2004)
- Akiko (2008)
- Ongakudo (2010)
- Yano Akiko, Imawano Kiyoshirō o Utau (2013)
- Tobashite Ikuyo (2014)
- Welcome to Jupiter (2015)
- Soft Landing (2017)
- Futaribocchi de Ikou (2018)
- Asteroid and Butterfly (2020)
- Music Is a Gift (2021)
Personal life
[edit]Yano married and soon after divorced Makoto Yano, the producer of her first recording.<ref name=nippop /> In 1975, her son Fuuta Yano was born.<ref name="taylor2016" /> She later married fellow musician Ryuichi Sakamoto, with whom she had a daughter, Miu Sakamoto. The young couple can be seen playing a duet on the piano at home in the 1985 documentary Tokyo Melody.<ref name="Dogme">Template:Cite web</ref> Yano separated from him in 1992, and they divorced in August 2006.<ref>Template:Cite web Translation)</ref> Yano is Christian.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
References
[edit]External links
[edit]- 1955 births
- Living people
- People from Aomori (city)
- Japanese jazz musicians
- Japanese jazz singers
- Japanese women jazz singers
- Japanese keyboardists
- Japanese women keyboardists
- Japanese pianists
- Japanese women pianists
- Anime composers
- Japanese people of Russian descent
- Japanese electronic musicians
- Japanese synth-pop musicians
- Japanese women singer-songwriters
- Japanese disco musicians
- Funk musicians
- Japanese new wave musicians
- Japanese women composers
- Japanese composers
- Japanese Christians
- Singers from Aomori Prefecture
- Singers from Tokyo
- Tokuma Japan Communications artists
- Japanese women in electronic music
- 20th-century Japanese women singers
- 20th-century Japanese singers
- 21st-century Japanese women singers
- 21st-century Japanese singers
- Ryuichi Sakamoto